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Voiced Velar Plosive IPA - Unicode> | align="center" style="font-size: 24px"| | | IPA - image | align="center"| | | X-SAMPA | align="center"|g | | Kirshenbaum | align="center"|g | | colspan="2"|Sound sample | The voiced velar plosive is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is , and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is g. The voiceless velar plosive occurs in English, and it is the sound denoted by the letter "g" in gum or bug. Features of this consonant: Varieties of g | IPA !! Description | | style="font-size:24px" align="center"|g | plain g | | style="font-size:24px" align="center"|gʰ or g̈ | aspirated or breathy voice g | | style="font-size:24px" align="center"|gʲ | palatalized g | | style="font-size:24px" align="center"|gʷ | labialized g | | style="font-size:24px" align="center"|g˺ | unreleased g | | style="font-size:24px" align="center"|g̊ | voiceless g | In English, the sound /g/ is denoted by the letter "g" as in gum or bag. However, the letter "g" does not always denote the sound /g/. When followed by "i" or "e" or preceded by d it sometimes denotes the affricate /dʒ/, as in gin and judgment. When preceded by "n" and occurring at the end of a morpheme, it often becomes the digraph "ng", which denotes the velar nasal and "g" is not pronounced, as in singer and rung, but not finger. In other languages The g sound is a common sound cross-linguistically. Many languages have at least a plain g, and some distinguish more than variety. Many Indian languages, such as Hindi, have a two-way contrast between aspirated (breathy voice) and plain g.
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